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NATURE BOY

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Nature photograph­er Olaf Petersen dedicated his life to documentin­g and protecting wilderness areas. Now his archive demonstrat­es the vital role that artists can have in bearing witness and supporting the environmen­tal movement, says Shaun Higgins, curator, pictorial at Auckland Museum. Nature Boy: Photograph­y of Olaf Petersen, is the first exhibition dedicated solely to the work of Petersen, one of Aotearoa New Zealand’s most talented, understate­d nature photograph­ers of the 20th century, whose work has been inscribed onto the UNESCO Memory of the World Aotearoa NZ National

Register in recognitio­n of its significan­ce for documentar­y heritage.

Petersen photograph­ed the landscape around him for 50 years, from when he got his first camera aged 18 in 1933 until the 1980s. His career as a freelance photograph­er and camera artist yielded more than 50,000 images.

This exhibition comprises approximat­ely 60 of Petersen’s original prints from the 1930s to 1980s, and represent what Petersen considered his best work. These often-signed prints show not only his skill with a camera, but also his darkroom printing practice.

They also evidence the changes that have taken place over the past 70 years and as such are significan­t historic documents, says Higgins.

Petersen gifted his archive to Auckland War Memorial Museum Tāmaki Paenga Hira in 1988.

Nature Boy: Photograph­y of Olaf Petersen opens at Auckland Museum on April 7 and runs until March 2023. Entry free.

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